For whom the bridge tolls: Why not East River spans?

BY TERESE LOEB KREUZER | “Bridge traffic and tolls are one of the most vexing problems” for Downtown community boards, said Brad Hoylman, chairperson of Community Board 2, in introducing a panel of experts who were about to deliver their most cogent thoughts on the subject to an audience at N.Y.U.’s Casa Italiana.

The May 10 panel discussion, entitled “Dealing with Downtown Bridge Traffic: Are Tolls the Answer?” was jointly sponsored by N.Y.U. and Board 2.

Shirley Secunda, chairperson of C.B. 2’s Traffic and Transportation Committee, who acted as moderator, said that traffic coming over the three East River spans — the Williamsburg, Manhattan and Brooklyn bridges — is noisy, and threatens safety and the historic infrastructure of Lower Manhattan neighborhoods.

“We have 250,000 motor vehicles a day coming into Manhattan over the East River bridges,” she said. “Tolling is a possible way to curb this terrible influx.”

Hope Cohen, one of the panelists, who is director of the New York program of the Regional Plan Association, said that part of the problem described by Secunda stems from the fact that three different entities administer New York City’s bridges, and they have different pricing structures. Some drivers go out of their way to use the East River bridges, which have no tolls.

The Port Authority owns the Hudson River bridges and they have the highest fees and are traditionally in the best condition, she said. M.T.A. Bridges and Tunnels owns and administers the Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel, the Queens Midtown Tunnel and several bridges (the major ones being the Throgs Neck, the Bronx-Whitestone, the Robert F. Kennedy, the Henry Hudson and the Verrazano-Narrows). The three East River bridges (Brooklyn, Manhattan and Williamsburg) are administered by the New York City Department of Transportation.

“They are traditionally considered ‘free,’ ” Cohen said. “They are not ‘free’ in terms of time [to cross them] and maintenance. They are untolled.” She said that these East River crossings were the least well maintained of the city’s bridges.

Leveling out the pricing structure on the bridges, Cohen said, “would lead to more evenly distributed traffic patterns.”

On the larger issue of how to reduce traffic congestion in Manhattan and on the roads leading into the borough, the panelists agreed that some form of congestion pricing was the answer. This measure would impose tolls on all cars coming into or leaving Manhattan. But the experts also felt that simply collecting tolls on bridges was insufficient. A congestion-pricing plan pushed by the Bloomberg administration in 2007 died when the state Assembly, which had to approve the plan, declined to vote on it.

“Any tolling plan is going to have to toll the entire central business district,” stated Charles Komanoff, a transportation analyst who lives in Lower Manhattan. The people from Queens, Brooklyn and Nassau and Suffolk counties would feel aggrieved, he said, if they were tolled but the people coming down from the Bronx, Mt. Vernon, New Rochelle, Scarsdale, Harrison, Rye and elsewhere in Westchester were not.

“About 350,000 vehicles daily cross 60th St. into the central business district of Manhattan,” he observed. “If we don’t toll at 60th St. in addition to the East River bridges, we’re going to be giving up a huge amount of revenue. We’ll be leaving dollars on the table that we need to capture to fully fund public transportation in the city.”

The panelists concurred that funding mass transit was the best use for toll monies collected and was the only likely way of selling congestion pricing to various constituencies that would have to approve it.

“We did a poll of more than 600 people who always vote in New York City primaries,” said panelist Paul Steely White, executive director of Transportation Alternatives. “When we asked them, ‘Do you think the following issue is very important, kind of important or not important at all?’ — by far the one issue that resonated with voters was improving transit. It was right up there with job creation and the economy in terms of issue importance.” On the other hand, White noted, “Traffic congestion and some of these other issues were way down the list.”

White said that those who are intent on passing some form of congestion pricing should highlight the transit benefits.

“The $90 million saved last year with massive transit cuts that included three subway lines and 30 bus lines is a fraction of what most estimates are of the revenue that could be generated by congestion pricing,” he said.

As for the deluge of traffic coming into Lower Manhattan about which Secunda complained at the start of the session, the panelists believed that higher costs for driving and improved mass transportation would cause many people to choose not to drive.

However, not everyone in attendance warmed to the congestion pricing solution that the panelists embraced.

A man in the audience said that he lives in Manhattan but his work takes him to Queens and Staten Island every day.

“Do you realize how much that costs in tolls?” he asked the panel. “A lot of people travel for business. I happen to have a bad knee. I had a knee operation. I need my car to go to work. I would have to take a subway, a bus and the Long Island Railroad — it would take two and a half hours. People have issues [with congestion pricing] — not just emotional issues. They have financial issues.”

“If we don’t pay for stuff now, then we just saddle the next generation with it,” said panelist Kate Slevin, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign. “Do you want to pass on a good subway system with an affordable fare? Or do you want to pass on a system that’s falling to pieces again and bridges that are falling down because of debt? That’s why I think congestion pricing is a good thing.”

Nevertheless, the panelists admitted that money raised by congestion pricing, were it enacted, might not go to the purposes for which it was intended should the lawmakers in Albany need it to plug a hole in the budget.

And meanwhile, traffic on streets fed by the East River bridges continues unabated. A woman in the audience who lives on Broome St. near Lafayette said that she hears seven hours of honking a day.

“Every day, I’m living with cars, even though I don’t own one,” she said. “I want to see some relief for this community.”

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3 Responses to For whom the bridge tolls: Why not East River spans?

The PA (especially) and MTA bridges mostly service traffic passing through the city, so dinging them for a toll is called for. The local bridges serve mostly local drivers and businesses, on intracity routes. Since this is a single city that spans a number of waterways, people traveling within the city should NOT have to pay to cross the rivers. If someone in Manhattan wants to shop in Queens, or someone from queens wants to come into Manhattan, they should not have to pay for the prviledge. Owning a car in the city is expensive enough as it is.